Seberg made her film debut in the title role of
Joan of Arc in
Saint Joan (1957), based on the
George Bernard Shaw play, having been chosen from among 18,000 hopefuls by director
Otto Preminger in a $150,000 talent search. Her name was entered by a neighbor. When she was cast on October 21, 1956, Seberg's only acting experience had been a single season of
summer stock performances. The film generated a great deal of publicity, but Seberg commented that she was "embarrassed by all the attention." On the failure, she later told the press:I am the greatest example of a very real fact, that all the publicity in the world will not make you a movie star if you are not also an actress. Preminger promised her a second chance,
Mylène Demongeot recalled in a 2015 filmed interview in Paris: "Otto had high hopes in Jean and
Saint Joan's failure took a toll on him also because there was a 5-films-contract from what I recall. She was extremely sad too about it and when we all arrived on the set of
Bonjour Tristesse she carried on her shoulders the weight of guilt, she was scared. And with that type of man, of character [Preminger] she shouldn't have shown fear, that's why I got along with him. I was a supporting role, I didn't have the weight of the expected success of the film on my shoulders. I had no apprehension regarding him. When he screamed, I would turn and tell him [sarcastically] "you know, you shouldn't screech like that, you gonna get yourself a stroke". Such words would defuse him. On the contrary, Jean was scared of him so he would take advantage and eventually became very mean to her."
Breathless and French career During the filming of
Bonjour Tristesse, Seberg met François Moreuil, the man who was to become her first husband, and she then based herself in France, finally achieving success as the
free-love heroine of
French New Wave films. Despite her achievements, Seberg did not identify with her characters or the film plots, saying that she was "making films in France about people [I'm] not really interested in." In New York City, she acted in the comedy
A Fine Madness (1966) with
Sean Connery and under the direction of
Irvin Kershner. In 1966 and 1967, Seberg played the leading roles in two French films directed by
Claude Chabrol and co-starring
Maurice Ronet. In February and March 1966, she starred in
Line of Demarcation, filmed around
Dole, Jura, and in May and June 1967, she played the lead role in the French-Italian
Eurospy film The Road to Corinth, shot in Greece. After making the crime drama
Pendulum with
George Peppard (1969), Seberg appeared in her only
musical film,
Paint Your Wagon (also 1969), based on
Lerner and Loewe's stage musical and co-starring
Lee Marvin and
Clint Eastwood. Her singing voice was dubbed by
Anita Gordon. Seberg also starred in the
ensemble disaster film Airport (1970), which drew mixed reviews but was a huge success at the box office.
Later career Seberg acted in the western
Macho Callahan (1970) and the violent crime drama
Kill! Kill! Kill! Kill! (1971), but both films were failures. In 1972, she appeared in
Gang War in Naples, which was successful in Europe but not in the United States. '' (1972) Seberg was
François Truffaut's first choice for the central role of Julie in
Day for Night (
La Nuit américaine, 1973), but after several fruitless attempts to contact her, he gave up and cast British actress
Jacqueline Bisset instead. Seberg's last American film appearance was in the TV movie
Mousey (1974). She remained active during the 1970s in European films, appearing in
White Horses of Summer (''Bianchi cavalli d'Agosto
) (1975), The Big Delirium (Le Grand Délire, 1975, with husband Dennis Berry) and Die Wildente'' (1976, based on Ibsen's
The Wild Duck). At the time of Seberg's death, she was working on the French film
Operation Leopard (
La Légion saute sur Kolwezi, 1980), which was based upon the book by
Pierre Sergent. She had filmed scenes in
French Guiana and returned to Paris for additional work in September. After her death, the scenes were reshot with actress
Mimsy Farmer. == FBI COINTELPRO operation ==